This Was
Stand Up
Benefit
Jethro Tull
Jethro Tull started out as a basic blues band with a secret weapon: a wild-eyed,
flute-wielding jester of a front man in a crusty overcoat. It wasn't an easy
sell -- there has never been anything particularly fresh-faced and cutesy wutesy
about Ian Anderson or his Tullian band mates. But it explains where their priorities
were -- first and foremost, it was about what lies between grooves. If you look
at the band's early efforts, there isn't much of a compromise in terms of commercial
viability. The young Tull is raw and feisty, but also testing the waters and
making inroads to unexplored territory. Now, re-released and remastered with
bonus tracks and liner notes personally inscribed by Anderson, This
Was, Stand Up and Benefit, the first
three Jethro Tull albums, demonstrate the primitive stirrings of the quirky
English ensemble. They remain a testament to the legacy of one of the most original
rock and roll bands in history.
First released in 1968, This Was is an uncharacteristic debut.
The cover depicts the four band members dressed as a bunch of dirty old men
surrounded by dogs -- hardly a flattering portrait of a new pop phenomenon.
The music sounds spontaneous yet seasoned, soaking in heavy strains of blues
and jazz. Guitarist Mick Abraham, the group's blues mentor who left shortly
after the album's release, is a dominant force on many numbers, including the
opener "My Sunday Feeling," "It's Breaking Me Up" and "Cat's
Squirrel." For all that Abraham offered, however, the sheer veracity of
Anderson's talent as a singer, songwriter and instrumentalist gives This Was
an incomparable quality. Together with bassist Glen Cornick and drummer Clive
Bunker, Tull swings far and wide on such tunes as "Beggar's Farm,"
"Serenade To A Cuckoo," "Dharma For One," and the first
of many songs about Anderson's friend and one-time bassist Jeffery Hammond-Hammond,
"A Song For Jeffrey." With an odd batch of three bonus tracks, This
Was is a great place to start.
For Stand Up, Tull flexes a little more muscle in their approach.
With new guitarist Martin Barre in tow, "A New Day Yesterday" jump
starts the proceedings on a very hard-hitting note. Suddenly, the group assumes
an organic pose, playfully tossing and turning through "Jeffrey Goes To
Leicester" and reinterpreting Bach on "Bouree." Stylistically,
"Back To The Family," "Look Into The Sun," "Nothing
Is Easy," "Fat Man" and "For A Thousand Mothers" pretty
much represent the JT sound fans have grown to love and worship. Four exceptional
bonus tracks make this collection a must-have. Along with the single "Living
In The Past," the steady roll of "Driving Song," the drama of
"Sweet Dream," and the brassiness of "17" fill out the disc
nicely. While the reissue lacks the original pop-up center gatefold, it more
than makes up for it with a clean and punchy sound.
The last of the trilogy, Benefit remains one of the band's
most eloquent statements. Augmented by keyboardist John Evan, many of the songs
are richer in their delivery. "With You There To Help Me" is a cosmic
centrifuge, a stark melody underscored by Anderson's harrowing flute work and
Barre's angular guitar attack. Mostly, however the record is marked by its contrasts
-- the attentiveness of something like "For Michael Collins, Jeffery and
Me" hangs in heavy balance to tomes like "Son" and "To Cry
You A Song." Capping off the CD are four bonus tracks including a UK mix
of "Teacher." In the liner notes, Anderson dedicates the remastered
version of Benefit to departing bassist Cornick and the newly recruited Evan.
At this juncture, he's also keen to remind everyone of what came next: Aqualung,
Jethro Tull's initiation into the big league and the beginning of an unprecedented
run of musical collages. Incredibly, the Jethro Tull saga continues unabated.
~ Shawn Perry
Back To
The Classic Eye Directory
©Copyright 1997, 2008 Vintage Rock
|